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LONDON (AP) — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange took his extradition battle to Britain’s Supreme Court on Wednesday, arguing that sending him to Sweden would violate a fundamental principle of natural law.

The two-day hearing is Mr. Assange‘s last chance to persuade British judges to quash efforts to send him to Scandinavia, where he is wanted on sex-crimes allegations.

The case hinges on a single technical point: whether Sweden’s public prosecutor can properly issue a warrant for Mr. Assange‘s arrest.

In Britain as in the United States, generally only judges can issue arrest warrants, and British courts honor warrants issued only by what they describe as judicial authorities.

Lawyers for Sweden argue that, in Sweden as in other European countries, prosecutors play a judicial or semijudicial role.

She said that wasn’t just a parochial British view, but rather a “fundamental principle” that stretches back 1,500 years to the Codex Justinius, the Byzantine legal code.

“No one may be a judge in their own case,” Ms. Rose said.

Ms. Rose spent the first 2½ hours of the hearing combing through British case law and parsing European draft treaties to buttress her case — in some cases slipping into French to make finer points and wording.

She claimed that those who set the rules for European extraditions expected that judicial authorities issuing warrants would be independent and impartial, noting that drafters dropped the reference to public prosecutors from the final version of their text.

Evidence showed, she said, that drafters believed “that the European arrest warrant was a very serious measure that has to be issued by a court.”

She spoke confidently and with few interruptions, but legal experts say Ms. Rose faces an uphill battle to persuade the Supreme Court to block the extradition.

Karen Todner, a prominent extradition specialist, said before the case started that Mr. Assange‘s lawyers were unlikely to overcome the benefit of the doubt usually afforded to other European countries’ judicial systems.

British judges “absolutely defer” to their European counterparts’ justice systems, she said, adding that she would be “very surprised” if Mr. Assange’s team won the day.

Just over a dozen sympathizers came to support Mr. Assange, a 40-year-old Australian, outside the Supreme Court building Wednesday.

“We’re here to show solidarity and hold a vigil for Julian Assange,” said Andrew Russell, 31. “He was able to show the world, open that window for a brief time into what’s really going on. I see him as a journalist who should be rewarded for that courageous work, rather than hounded.”

The U.K. justices, who have dispensed with formal court attire in favor of business suits, will hear lawyers for the prosecution on Thursday. Their decision isn’t expected for several weeks.

If they rule against Mr. Assange, he is expected to be on a flight to Sweden within two weeks. Mr. Assange conceivably could appeal to the European Court of Human Rights, but because Sweden is a fellow European country, that would not stop his extradition.

Once in Sweden, he would be arrested, and a detention hearing would be held within four days. Prosecutors could decide to release him after questioning, but the court could also extend his period of detention. Such hearings must be held every two weeks until a suspect is charged or released. There is no bail in Sweden.

It’s still not clear whether charges will be brought against him in Sweden. If Mr. Assange is convicted, the penalties for the types of crime he’s accused of range from fines to as much as six years in prison.

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